Writer
Erik Beach
Latest Content
Life and Times of Mr. Rogers
Measuring an individual’s impact on a university is a difficult task and is usually divided along the lines of one’s
Sexual Power in the Jim Crow South
Frankie J. Petrosino’s buck is subtitled “a new play about love, race, and the price of sex.” While the play
Books In Brief
Illness has always been an important bedfellow to reflection and consideration of new directions. Some works of art would be
OUT AND ABOUT
Funked-Up with Fink Fank Funk The Middle East Saturday, October 6 Emerging from the depths of Harvard University’s myriad of
Out & About
Red, White and Green The Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition 12th Annual Freedom Rally Featuring Scissorfight Boston Common, September 15 The
CLIFF NOTES
Jimmy Cliff is quite possibly the greatest living reggae artist. He credits his own work with helping to shape the
Life on the High-Wire
BOOKS Mailer By Mary V. Dearborn Houghton Mifflin Co. 478 pp. $30 Life on the High-Wire By ERIK A. BEACH
Panel on Prison Reform Draws Boos, Hisses, Heated Debate
Former California attorney general Dan Lungren was pounded by audience hisses and two ideological opponents last night at an Institute
Biography: What Is It?
Sartre's novel Nausea, the main character Roquentin is unable to finish his biography of a historical figure. Roquentin ultimately ends
Years of Debate Bound in One Volume
Apart from the oppressed minority of conservatives at the Salient and the many rumored "closet conservatives" on the Harvard campus,
Ojos: Window to the Soul
"Tranquilo, tranquilo. Abre los ojos" (Relax, relax. Open your eyes.) Cesar hears a voice telling him this after jumping off
Richard III: Two Views
King Richard III represents what is perhaps the most ambitious character in a Shakespearean pantheon full of ambitious characters. Whereas
Richard III: Two Views
THEATER Richard III: Two Views Directed by Tina Packer At the Loeb Mainstage Through May 8 PRO By Christopher R.
Our Surprisingly Spammy Century
Harvey Mansfield just might like the Onion. It definitely isn't politically correct, poking fun at blacks, Jews, gays, women, the
Black and Gold
Cinemanic "My brothers and sisters, it's time to go down town. Jesus Christ went down town. He hung around uptown